<p><a href="http://www.sony.com/pc" ><b>Sony</b></a><br> Bob DeMoulin, Marketing Manager with Sony, shows us the Vaio Digital Studio PC with built in DVD-ROM drive and a Sony external DVD-ROM drive that can be added to an existing PC. <p><a href="http://www.panasonic.com/oemdvd-ram" ><b>Panasonic, Computer Components Group</b></a><br> Jeff Saake shows us Panasonic's DVD-RAM drive. The product has received high reviews from numberous PC magazines. It's low cost per megabyte and fast transfer speeds make it a must-have if you depend on high capacity storage.</p> <p><a href="http://www.mcp.com/" ><b>How Computers Work</b></a><br> Author, Ron White, gives us a basic explanation of how DVD works and the vast power of its memory capabilities. Ron also demonstrates <a href="http://www.microsoft.com/encarta" >Microsoft's Encarta</a> and the archive of <a href="http://www.nationalgeographic.com/" >National Geographic Magazine</a> as products best utilizing the DVD capabilities</p> <p><a href="http://www.slingshotent.com/" ><b>Enterprise DVD</b></a><br> Ron Michaels, better known as "DVD Bob" because he claims to have authored the first-ever DVD-ROM disk, demonstrates three hot DVD products. First is Civilization, a cutting edge music video and what he thinks is the future of DVD products. Next Bob shows us an I-MAX film that has been modified for home viewing with a web component and ROM game. And last, a new 3D game not yet released.</p>